I was a parish councillor for eight years -for four of those years I was the chairman. I was originally co-opted onto the council because there were insufficient candidates to fill all the seats. When I left the council there were enough candidates to require an election.
I found Prof Davey's comments interesting - because they portrayed a world that was totally different from the one I had experienced. Perhaps the main difference was that
not one member of my council at any time had any political party affiliation. We were all inhabitants of the village, all concerned with life in the village, and all wishing to make life in the village better. I find Rhiannon's negative comment about parish councillors:
aside from the corruption at parish level, which is eye watering, and no, you can't do anything by trying to stand or vote for someone else because it is all stitched up in advance
so far from my own experience that it is practically insulting.
During my membership we improved street lighting, we got public footpaths properly defined and maintained. We managed to prevent hedgerows from being cut back in the spring and summer so that birds could breed undisturbed. We re-equipped a children's playground. We enabled the building of a number houses for social provision and prevented the transformation of nursery land into into a very upmarket speculative housing development.
Not one of these actions was motivated by anything than the needs of and benefits to the community.
During my period as chairman, I was interviewed for local radio, appeared on Midlands Today, met members of a House of Lords committee looking into rural housing and led a small delegation which resulted in my village being judged the county Village of the Year.
And all without the benefit of any political label.